Port Maitland "On the Grand" Historical
Association

Port Maitland, Ontario, Canada

A birds-eye look at Port Maitland in 1929.
Part 7

By William A. Warnick

Published Sept 5, 2001
in The Dunnville Chronicle

As with any story when written from memory my column last month
contained at least one error. I told you that Tom Siddall lived in a
house located behind what is now the Port Maitland Sailing Club. Tom
did live in a house along the river but it was in the area where Terry
Powell now has his shipyard. The fellow who lived in my errant house
was named Sam Dils. Sam was a bee keeper with a few hives on his
property which he named Snug Harbour. Sam is remembered by some for his
tiny three horse motor boat which he would motor down river to the
Exchange Hotel for a few drafts. After tossing down more than his share
he would walk home and go to bed. The next morning he would ask around
Port for his lost boat. Soon he would find it just where he had parked
it the previous afternoon. Sam was a brother-in-law to Milan (Milo)
Culp, the well known boot-legger, rumrunner and fisherman from Port
Maitland. I have not written in my column about Milo, and his exploits
into the legal and sometimes not so legal aspects of his career, but I
will!

Let us now slip across the river to the east side and
correct one other item. This one is from my March column. I stated;
“All that remains on the east side of the Grand River photographed in
1929 is the old house on the hill which once belonged to my grandfather,
now called Chateaux Côté and another building, the home of the late Tom
Spray, today owned by Bernard and Shawn Desmarais.” In fact, there
remains a cottage along the river which was built in 1905, by Tom Harris
and D. (I believe Doug) Lockhart of Stromness. This cottage now
belongs to Jim and Sandra Gill of Hamilton.

What is now notably missing and were in the 1929 photo are
the Canada Coal Company, the TH&B Railway station and the four
commercial fish companies which were very prevalent during the first
half of the twentieth century. If you journey to Port Maitland today,
after passing Rhodia, you will reach the river at what was formerly
known as Brown’s Point, named after Edwin (C E) Brown, of “Brown’s
Arcade.”

Across the Feeder Canal beginning at its mouth were three
fish companies. The one closest to the river was called the Independent
Fish Co. and was owned by Jack Mossip and George (Shorty) Gorral. Next
to the Independent was the Port Maitland Fish Co. owned by a group of
Port Maitland fishermen including Percy Siddall, George Little, Stephen
McKeown, and Jack McKee. These men chose to pack their fish as a
collective, much as they did years later at the Port Maitland Fishermans
Co-op. A third fishery was built and owned by Benny Crumb (Circa
1921). Unfortunately Benny ran into some difficulties and within a year
or two sold his fishery and briefly moved to the United States. For a
time brothers Harry, John and Bill Siddall took over the Crumb fishery.
A fourth fish company (located on the river near my grandfather’s
former cottage) was the Charles Ross Fisheries also known as the “A.
Booth Syndicate or Trust (1884) of Buffalo.” By the time 1929 came
around this fishery was owned by Ed Martin, son of Ed Martin senior
owner of the Exchange Hotel. The Booth Fisheries could still be found in
the yellow pages in Malton Ontario as late as 1990.

I do not know what year but it was in the early to mid
1930's that brothers George and Lorne Siddall owners of the tug G & L
located their business on the south side of the canal beginning the
exodus from the north side. There had been a number of fires on the
north side which destroyed some of the fish-houses and the TH&B was
pressuring the fishermen to move from its property.

Opposite Brown Point, was Robinson’s Point, named for
George and Jenny Robinson. Jenny descended from the Sundy family of
Attercliffe Station. Here was the docking facility for the TH&B
Navigation Company’s car ferry Maitland No. One. It was here that the
Maitland No One loaded and offloaded her 28 railway cars usually
containing coal from Pennsylvania, via Ashtabula Ohio, destined for the
steel mills in Hamilton. On the north side of this dock was a small yet
intriguing piece of land. What is intriguing is that on this tiny
fragment of river front. the east pier at Port Maitland and Port
Colborne piers were built, then floated into place. It is from
examining this piece of land I am reasonably able to date this photo.
The piers were constructed during the years from 1927 to 1929. As there
is no sign of construction taking place in this photo and the east pier
is still in one piece, I know the photo was taken late in summer or
early fall of 1929. The brake in the pier opened on February 25, 1930.
Thus, 1929!

Further to the north we can see the coal slip where the
other ships bringing coal from Pennsylvania and Ohio docked to unload.
At first they were emptied by a clam shovel, then with the onset of
self-unloaders the ships crews handled the task themselves. As with
most of the items mentioned in this series, I have barely touched on the
facts of these interesting landmarks. I will revisit them in future
articles giving you much more to ponder.

Brown's Arcade in Dunnville heb008

Brown's Point Port Maitland from RUTH II Jane Brown 01

Aerial View of Fish houses on North side of Feeder 1929
with Tug GLENERIE